P9e Ten THE MICHIGAN DA4LY Thursday, May 19, 1977 Vance, Gromyko ink 'Sare' nerlv reach disarmament accord GENEVA, Switzerland 1, - Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko yesterday signed a convention banning warfare techniques aimed at creating nat- ural disasters and then opened talks on nuclear arms and the Mideast. The two leaders joined officials from 31 other nations in the council chamher of Geneva's Palace of Nations for a brief cere- mony putting an environmental warfare convention into force and formally beginning ratification procedures toward its be- coming international lass. MASSIVE DESTRUCTION weapons banned by the convention include those that would create catastrophes such as tidal waves, hurricanes and earthquakes. Such weapons are still on scientists' drawing boards. The three-days of talks between Gromyko and Vance opened at the Soviet Mission and began with a photo session under a. portrait of Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. Gromyko joked with Vance about the large pile of papers the secretary of state had brought with him and said he was carrying only a single sheet. The two leaders then moved to an adjacent room where they signed an agreement renewing a 1972 agreement providing for continued cooperation between Washington and Moscow in such areas as space meteorology, environmental studies and the ex- change of information on lunar, Mars and Venus exploration. "THIS IS a good treaty," Gromyko said, "It is connected with the main weapons agreement a little bit." But the Soviet foreign minister did not respond when a reporter asked how long it would take to reach a new arms limitation accord. Then, joined by arms negotiator Paul Warnke on the U. S. side, and Warnke's Soviet counterpart, Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir Semenov, the two sides opened their SALT negotiations behind closed doors. The current Strategic Arms Limitation Agree- ment, SALT 1, expires in October. The first topic for discussion was the search of what Vance calls a synthesis between the U. S. and Soviet position on limiting nuclear weapons. Ile said he brought no new proposals with him and "we're merely resuming our discussions." - %-W %eu 07U"0 InMa*I By SHARON BONANNI MNichigan Square, brought to you by the First Martin Corpor- ation, is nearing completion. The four story building on Lib- erty between S. Division and Fifth Avenue is apparently nearly leased out except for the second floor. Originally, the company plan- ned for a restaurant to occupy that floor, but those plans were thwarted when City Council did not grant the restaurant a li- quor license, according to Bill Martin, owner of First Martin Corporation. TIlE PROSPECTIVE restau- rant, "Guthrie's Digs," a sub- sidiary of the Great Lake Steak Company, awaits the possibility of further action on its liquor license application. No other lease agreement for the second floor has been made, but several tenants have already rented space in the 30,000 square foot building. THE ANN Arbor Community News Center, a paperback book and magazine firm, recently opened on the ground floor, fac- ing S. Division. Chi Systems, a 20-member health care planning and con- sultant firm, previously locat- ed on Green Road, is also open. Three other tenants, Aetna Life and Casualty Company, Northern Life Insurance Com- pany, and Dr. John McWil- liams, an opthamologist, also plan to open soon. ALTHOUGH the First Martin Corporation declined to dis- close specific corporate names, they have revealed other ten- ants would include an import specialty shop and a women's apparel store which is relocat- ing from another Ann Arbor site.- First Martin Corporation also confirmed speculation about the move of a prominent stock bro- kerage to Michigan Square. Lo- cal investment sources say the anonymous firm could be Mer- rill, Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith. If so, the square would be the first Ann Arbor location for that firm. Chris Potter, spokesperson for First Martin, estimates it will be at least 30 to 60 days before the completion of the first floor. Prosecution's wItness fails EVERYONE'S READING DAII.Y CLASSIFIEDS ARE YOU ? (Cntlnued front Page 3) tall with a" fairly round face" and "a little bit plump for her height." "I THOUGHT at the time she was Asian. Non-Anglican. Non- caucasian," Goodenday said, but also said the nurse was not Jap- anese or Chinese. Asked by Yanko if the nurse was Filipino, the doctor replied, "could have been." Dr. Goodenday was able to point out defendant Filipino Na- cisco in the court room, but could not tell if Narciso was the nurse present at the time of pa- tient McCrery's breathing fail- ure. Asked outright by Yanko if "Narciso was the nurse you saw?" the witness replied, "I don't think I can be certain." One witness had testified two weeks ago about how nurse Nar- ciso had stood "kind of mesmer- ized" while the witness's father was suffering a breathing failure similar to McCrery's. NARCISO, ALONG with VA nurse Leonora Perez, is accused of murdering two patients and poisoning seven others by inject- ing Pavulon, a powerful muscle relaxant, into the patients' in- traveneous feeding tube. John McCrery, one of five pa- tients who stopped breathing on August 1, had been admitted to the VA ten days earlier for evaluation of a heart condition. Dr. Goodenday described Mc- Crery's breathing failure as "to- tally unnatural," and pointed to tests which confirmed that his stoppage of breathing had been induced by some muscle relax- ant like Pavulon. No one had prescribed Pavu- lon or any other muscle relax- ant to McCrery, the medical record chart showed. McCRERY SURVIVED the breathing failure of Aug. 15 and lived until June 1976 when he died of his heart condition. In other testimony, defense attorneys used prosecution wit- ness Dr. Thomas Weber to coun- ter charges made Tuesday by the sister of one VA patient. Betty Jean Barnett had testi- fied the nurses didn't keep her brother, patient Benny Blame, cleaned. DR. WEBER told the jury Blaine was "extremely difficult" to keep clean, due to the nature of his injury. The doctor also responded to Barnett's charges that the after- noon shift, to which Narciso and Perez were assigned, was in- compentent. "We he (Blaine) any dirtier on one shift than on another?" Defense Attorney Ed- ward Stein asked. The witness replied: "Not to me, no." Under questioning from de- fense attorney Thomas O'Brien, Dr. Weber testified he had never seen either Narciso or Perez mistreat or harm a patient. "DID YOU EVER see any- thing that would lead you to be- lieve that Miss Narciso and Mrs. Perez were trying to poison pa- tients?" O'Brien asked. Dr. Weber replied, "no." At this point, FBI agent Dan- iel Russo, who headed up the investigation was overheard by a defense attorney to whisper, "that doesn't mean that they didn't do it." Russo told report- ers later he didn't recall making the statement. Federal Judge Philip Pratt or- dered both parties to refrain from making any "demonstra- tion or remarks" that might be overheard by the jury. i i Jogging is healthy fun, and stylish (Continuedifrom Page $) in shape, jogging, coupled with the wrong diet, can be harm- ful. NATHAN PRITIKIN, of the Longevity Research Institute of Santa Barbara, Calif., cautions joggers who run a lot and eat a lot. Pritikin says fats and choles- terol in the typical American diet can, when ingested, break loose and float through the sys- tem. These particles, some- times shaken from internal groupings by exercise, can clog blood vessels, and event- ually stop the heart. He advises a lean meat, fresh fruit and vegetable diet for all, especially for those who exer- cise frequently. Fran Rosenfeld, another avid jogger in the Ann Arbor area, agrees with others that the act of jogging is "quite hellish." Not only does he say "it feels so good when I stop," but also, "Most people who try it and keep at it long enough get hooked on itL" Pritikin would probably say, "That's great." But first, he says, there is another, more necessary exercise: Pushing yourself away from the dinner table when you've had enough. A Pubc 'ervice of this newspaper & The Advertising Councl Today is the first d of he resto ou ife. so itcanehfrta ofsomebody es',too. e s d so i IWC~v